136 research outputs found

    Examining reading fluency in a foreign language: Effects of text segmentation on L2 readers

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    Grouping words into meaningful chunks is a fundamental process for fluent reading. The present study is an attempt to understand the relationship between chunking and second language (L2) reading fluency. The effects of text segmentation on comprehension, rate, and regression in L2 reading were investigated using a self-paced reading task in a moving-window condition. The participants were intermediate and advanced level Japanese EFL learners. The difficulty of chunking a text negatively affected comprehension and smoothness for the intermediate learners, while the advanced learners were able to overcome chunking difficulty. In this study, although the negative effects of chunking difficulty were observed, the positive effects of assisting chunking were not clearly detected, which was interpreted as suggesting that the relationship between chunking and reading needs to be considered in light of the complex interplay between text difficulty and different aspects of reading

    Clinically Mild Encephalopathy with a Reversible Splenial Lesion Accompanying Mumps Virus Infection:a 5-Year-Old Girl Report

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    Aseptic meningitis is known as a mumps complication. However, there are few cases of clinically mild encephalopathy with a reversible splenial lesion(MERS) associated with mumps infection. We report a MERS related to mumps infection in a girl. In the early clinical course, repeating convulsion and consciousness disturbance with hallucination were recognized. Initially, we suspected aseptic meningitis due to mumps, because of her swollen right parotid gland. Cerebrospinal fluid test was performed, but the result was normal. After that, diffusion weighted image of magnetic resonance imaging was added and abnormal signal intensity was recognized in the corpus callosum, so she was diagnosed as MERS. Treatment was performed with steroid pulse therapy and patients was discharged without neurologic sequelae. We need to pay attention to MERS as complication although rare in a mumps infection

    Discovery of Dying Active Galactic Nucleus in Arp 187: Experience of Drastic Luminosity Decline within 10410^4 years

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    Arp 187 is one of the fading active galactic nuclei (AGN), whose AGN activity is currently decreasing in luminosity. We investigate the observational signatures of AGN in Arp 187, which trace various physical scales from less than 0.1 pc to the nearly 10 kpc, to estimate the longterm luminosity change over 10410^{4} years. The VLA 5 GHz, 8 GHz, and the ALMA 133 GHz images reveal bimodal jet lobes with \sim5 kpc size and the absence of the central radio-core. The 6dF optical spectrum shows that Arp 187 hosts narrow line region with the estimated size of \sim1 kpc, and the line strengths give the AGN luminosity of Lbol=1.5×1046L_{\rm bol}=1.5 \times 10^{46} erg s1^{-1}. On the other hand, the current AGN activity estimated from the AGN torus emission gives the upper bound of Lbol<2.2×1043L_{\rm bol} < 2.2 \times 10^{43} erg s1^{-1}. The absence of the radio-core gives the more strict upper bound of the current AGN luminosity of Lbol<8.0×1040L_{\rm bol} < 8.0 \times 10^{40} erg s1^{-1}, suggesting that the central engine is already quenched. These multi-wavelength signatures indicate that Arp 187 hosts a "dying" AGN: the central engine is already dead, but the large scale AGN indicators are still observable as the remnant of the past AGN activity. The central engine has experienced the drastic luminosity decline by a factor of 1035\sim10^{3-5} fainter within 104\sim10^{4} years, which is roughly consistent with the viscous timescale of the inner part of the accretion disk within \sim500 years.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    NuSTAR Discovery of Dead Quasar Engine in Arp 187

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    Recent active galactic nucleus (AGN) and quasar surveys have revealed a population showing rapid AGN luminosity variability by a factor of 10\sim10. Here we present the most drastic AGN luminosity decline by a factor of 103\gtrsim 10^{3} constrained by a NuSTAR X-ray observation of the nearby galaxy Arp 187, which is a promising "dead" quasar whose current activity seems quiet but whose past activity of Lbol1046L_\mathrm{bol} \sim 10^{46} erg s1^{-1} is still observable at a large scale by its light echo. The obtained upper bound of the X-ray luminosity is log(L210keV/ergs1)<41.2\log (L_{\rm 2-10 keV}/{\rm erg} {\rm s}^{-1}) < 41.2, corresponding to log(Lbol/ergs1)<42.5\log (L_\mathrm{bol}/{\rm erg} {\rm s}^{-1}) < 42.5, indicating an inactive central engine. Even if a putative torus model with NH1.5×1024N_\mathrm{H} \sim 1.5 \times 10^{24} cm2^{-2} is assumed, the strong upper-bound still holds with log(L210keV/ergs1)<41.8\log (L_{\rm 2-10 keV}/{\rm erg} {\rm s}^{-1}) < 41.8 or log(Lbol/ergs1)<43.1\log (L_\mathrm{bol}/{\rm erg} {\rm s}^{-1}) < 43.1. Given the expected size of the narrow line region, this luminosity decrease by a factor of 103\gtrsim 10^3 must have occurred within 104\lesssim 10^4 yr. This extremely rapid luminosity/accretion shutdown is puzzling and it requires one burst-like accretion mechanism producing a clear outer boundary for an accretion disk. We raise two possible scenarios realizing such an accretion mechanism: a mass accretion 1) by the tidal disruption of a molecular cloud and/or 2) by the gas depletion as a result of vigorous nuclear starformation after rapid mass inflow to the central engine.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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